Edible Succulents - Indoor Garden in a Bicycle Wheel Planter

In February 2011, I took a damaged rear bicycle wheel, cleaned it of grime, and rigged it into a planter for succulents.

It recalls, in its shallow soil depth, and succulent plants, a miniature version of a rooftop garden. Except for the fact that some of the 27 kinds of plants placed on it are frost-tender, and so would be killed in a hard winter freeze, it could be kept outside in Seattle. For the time being, it is inside, lighted both from a southwest facing window, and a 160-watt wide-spectrum, self-ballasted incandescent lightbulb about 5 feet above it.

The bicycle wheel is an Araya, size 27 inch diameter by 1.25 inch thickness. The rim is likely aluminum, the spokes look to be steel. The freewheel is deadweight and I would advise to anyone else: remove it – or use a front wheel. I lack a Shimano freewheel-remover, so it is still on. To clean the wheel, I used isopropyl alcohol, paper towels, and a stiff brush.

Next I fitted onto the bottom side, metal-mesh, quarter-inch galvanized hardware cloth. Using tin snips, I cut the sheet into a circle, making a hole for the protruding freewheel and hub, and affixed this wire mesh to spokes using numerous little pieces of re-bar wire.

Then I went to my garden and gathered handfuls of pleurocarpous mosses and packed it between the upper side spokes and the wire mesh. I thought about buying sterile peat moss, or sterilizing my moss, but opted to try it as is, full of microscopic and some macroscopic creatures and soil particles. No professional nursery or greenhouse operation would dare use unsterilized moss as I did, because it can introduce nuisances such as worms, pests or diseases.

The purpose of the moss layer is twofold: it will help prevent the soil layer from filtering through the wire mesh screen; it can be misted with water spray to wick-up moisture intended for the plant roots. I could have used a sponge or foam layer that would have done the same thing, but desired to try living moss – risks and all.

Wheel with moss (photo by ALJ)

A layer of potting soil was then sprinkled liberally atop the moss, like putting grated cheese atop a pizza. This potting soil was my own blend of “Cactus & Succulent Mix” from Fleetfoot & Foulweather; a few cups of finely ground dolomitic limestone; handfuls of Perlite; and a handful of Walt’s Organic Fertilizer (9-3-5).

Wheel with potting soil mix (photo by ALJ)

Atop the potting soil mix, I affixed chicken wire mesh, cut in a circle just like the quarter-inch mesh on the bottom. The role of this chicken wire mesh is, when the succulent plants all establish an intertwined root system, then maybe I can hang the wheel on a fence without everything falling off. Also, it will make it that much harder for squirrels to dig in it, when I place it outside in summer. The chicken wire also had to be affixed to many spokes and the wire mesh at the bottom.

Wheel with chicken wire added (photo by ALJ)

Using a rope that I guess is nylon, I suspended the planted wheel in my office, placing a large piece of cardboard underneath it to catch falling debris, that I sweep up occasionally and put back on top where it belongs.

Wheel hanging, ready to plant (photo by ALJ)

Finally I planted it. This was the pleasant part. I plucked pieces of 27 kinds of succulents that I find edible, and laid or poked them gently atop the potting soil. It looks lovely. I assume most will adjust to their trauma, form a callus, and root. Some will almost certainly shrivel and die. Here is a list:

Æonium Haworthii “Kiwi”

Carpobrotus chilensis

Carpobrotus edulis

Coleus amboinicus–bigleaf clone

Coleus amboinicus–small-leaf clone

Delosperma Cooperi

Delosperma Ecklonis var. latifolia

Delosperma “Mesa Verde”

Delosperma “John Proffit”

Dudleya cymosa

Dudleya virens ssp. Hessei

Graptopetalum paraguayense

Mesembryanthemum “Red Apple”

Portulacaria afra “weeping”

Portulacaria afra “Variegata”

Ruschia hamata

Ruschia Putterellii

Sedum album “Hillbrantii”

Sedum sp. album?

Sedum confusum

Sedum Palmeri

Sedum præaltum

Sedum reflexum

Sedum x rubrotinctum

Sedum suaveolens

Sempervivum tectorum

Sempervivum tectorum (purplish)

Wheel planted (photo by ALJ)

Were this to be an actual rooftop garden, then a lighter-weight soil mix would be needed, and presumably a great many more plant kinds used. In climates such as Seattle, with dry summers, appropriate plant choices are limited. Most cities have rainy summers, so can use a wider array of plants. Most Seattle rains come in winter when plants don’t need it. When plants are growing, between May and the end of August, Seattle averages only some 5 inches of rain – just like Rome.

[The Sedum album ‘Hillbrantii’ that I list above, may actually be Sedum Hillebrandii Fenzl, a species that some botanists place in synonymy with Sedum sexangulare L.]

About Arthur Lee Jacobson

A lifelong Seattle resident, Arthur developed a passion for plants at 17 and has made his living growing, photographing, and writing about plants. He is a rare expert who can speak about wild plants, garden plants, and house plants.

Arthur has a special interest in edible plants, and, in his field guide Wild Plants of Greater Seattle, he includes comments on the edibility, taste, and uses of plants found in the city.

My wheel has been hanging outside since April 22nd, and most of the plants have perished from variously lack of water or insufficient sunlight or whatnot. Very gratifying how some are enduring. When my work schedule frees me a bit, I ought to plant more to fill the gaps. At the very least I ought to share a list of the survivors . . .

I’ve been growing succulents commercially for over 40 years in PA and I’ve never thought about their edibility. Also, am looking for a plant I used to grow back in the 70’s but now can’t find. Maybe you can be helpful in these areas. I would like to correspond with you on e-mail if that is possible. Richard lenatsky [email protected]